Mamun Hossen
a group of us A group of us 'are' going to hold a party tomorrow. (Not is) ---> The expression ‘a group of us’ is followed by a plural verb. #Source: EnglishGrammar dot org But, I can't think so. Why does the expression take a plural verb? Can anyone help me understand this?
Aug 2, 2017 7:22 PM
Answers · 2
Either is OK. With collective nouns, you can typically use either a singular form to refer to the group, or a plural form to refer to the members of the group. Sometimes you use plural to deliberately emphasise that you are taking about the individuals. Sometimes, (as I suspect is the case here) people use the plural because it seems more natural because of the implicit plural of 'us'.
August 2, 2017
the plural actually comes from "us" rather than "group" - it's the same as if you said "a group of people are going to hold a party" or "we are going to hold a party"
August 2, 2017
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